Gulf News

A farm beneath London?

AIR-RAID SHELTER ABANDONED FOR 70 YEARS NOW FEEDING CITY’S RESTAURANT­S

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nder an anonymous back street in south London lies a vast undergroun­d airraid shelter that has been turned into a pioneering urban farm supplying supermarke­ts and restaurant­s in the capital.

The Second World War shelter in Clapham, which could protect up to 8,000 people from Nazi German bombs, consists of two large tunnels that were intended to one day become an extension of the London Undergroun­d.

That never happened and the shelter lay abandoned for 70 years until two entreprene­urs, Steven Dring and Richard Ballard, decided to grow broccoli, coriander, fennel and a host of other vegetables as so-called micro leaves, also known as micro herbs, grown from seedlings but harvested early when the first leaves form.

“We need to create these new fertile spaces” to meet increased demand from a growing global population,” Dring told AFP on a visit to the “Growing Undergroun­d” site — some 33 metres below the road. The vegetables are grown with hydroponic­s, using nutrient solutions in a water solvent instead of soil.

The technique can also be used to grow a wide range of produce including tomatoes and baby peppers, Dring said.

The only other ingredient required is light.

The tunnels have no natural light and are illuminate­d with pink LEDs, giving them a futuristic look.

The intensity of the light changes to imitate daylight, but with one major difference — the lights are dimmed during the day and shine brightest at night, as electricit­y is cheapest then. “We predominan­tly grow micro herbs, which are standard herbs, from different seeds.

“But what we do is we grow them to a very small stage, before the first true leaves start to come out,” Dring said.

The micro herb broccoli takes between three and five days to grow before being packaged up in the shelter and sent off. Fans enthuse about the intensity of the flavours of the produce.

Customers include Marks and Spencer which offers the produce in some of its supermarke­ts, several stalls at London’s Borough Market and many restaurant­s — helped by the patronage of celebrity chef Michel Roux Jr. of Le Gavroche.

Vertical farming

Dring and Ballard latched onto the concept of vertical farming — producing food in vertically stacked layers — which was developed by US biologist Dickson Despommier in his 2010 book The Vertical Farm: Feeding the World in the 21st Century.

The operation takes up some 200 metres of the 1,000 metres available in the air-raid shelter tunnel, half for growing while the other half is used for packaging.

Their request to use the airraid shelter in Clapham was eagerly taken up by the owners of the space, London’s public transport company.

This type of farming is “100 times cheaper” than setting up an urban farm on the surface, Dring said.

Their customers say they are happy with the result.

“I think the story is fantastic,” said Charlie Curtis, an agronomist at Marks and Spencer supermarke­t chain. “The quality is fantastic and the flavour is like something I’ve never had before,” she said.

Every day is the same in the undergroun­d farm and there are no seasons, or unpredicta­ble British weather.

 ?? AFP ?? Co-founder of the ‘Growing Undergroun­d’ project, Steven Dring (left) speaks with a worker in London, inside the vast undergroun­d air-raid shelter that has been turned into an urban farm.
AFP Co-founder of the ‘Growing Undergroun­d’ project, Steven Dring (left) speaks with a worker in London, inside the vast undergroun­d air-raid shelter that has been turned into an urban farm.
 ?? AFP ?? The site of the undergroun­d air-raid shelter which has been turned into the urban farm project ‘Growing Undergroun­d’.
AFP The site of the undergroun­d air-raid shelter which has been turned into the urban farm project ‘Growing Undergroun­d’.
 ?? AFP ?? Supermarke­t salad mix with a ‘sustainabl­y grown’ label from the urban farm project.
AFP Supermarke­t salad mix with a ‘sustainabl­y grown’ label from the urban farm project.

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